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Here is a link to my memoirs which, if you are a glutton for punishment, you can purchase online at https://www.kobo.com/gb/en/ebook/an-obscure-footnote-in-trade-union-history.
Men fight and lose the battle, and the thing that they fought for comes about in spite of their defeat, and when it comes turns out not to be what they meant, and other men have to fight for what they meant under another name. (William Morris - A Dream of John Ball)

Tuesday, February 25, 2020

Tory "spiv's charter" threat to trade unions?


The Tories’ latest plans to attack trade unions illustrate quite well their lack of understanding of workplace realities and of the history of employee relations in this country. These plans don’t pose much of an immediate material threat to our movement, but they highlight the ideological hostility to collectivism which drives the Government – and which will drive them to further attacks when this one turns out to be something of a damp squib.

Their cunning plan is to extend the right to be accompanied, under section 10 of the Employment Relations Act 1999, so that instead of being restricted to work colleagues and trade union representatives, there will be some other category of qualified or experienced representatives to whom workers can turn.

This wheeze has excited Tory supporters, who think it is “fairer” to eliminate the unions’ “monopoly” of the right to accompany workers at hearings. It would create new opportunities for non-union organisations offering individual representation (for those who don’t want to be bothered with collective bargaining, solidarity or industrial action) – such as Edapt in the schools sector.

Our Government’s ignorance of our history would be amusing if it weren’t for the fact that they are, well, our Government. The statutory right to be accompanied (by a work colleague or trade union representative) at a workplace disciplinary or grievance hearing was introduced only just over twenty years ago, alongside the statutory process to seek union recognition, during Blair’s first term.

Before that workers had no statutory right to be accompanied (by anyone) at a disciplinary hearing at work. Trade unions had fought for and established this right through collective bargaining outside the law. Following the introduction of the right to claim unfair dismissal in the 1970s, case law – and the concomitant growth of the personnel function throughout industry – permitting workers to be represented at hearings had become commonplace but – until 1999 – it was not on a statutory footing.

The then Conservative opposition had opposed Labour’s Employment Relations Act in 1999 because, they said, it would “jeopardise employment, endanger the successful legacy of good industrial relations left by the last Government, impose further damaging costs on British business and risk industrial strikes and disruption, rather than leaving employers and employees free to settle relationships for themselves without outside interference.” John Redwood said; “I am all for people belonging to trade unions if they wish, but I am not in favour of forcing them to become members, or making them use the trade union to represent them when they wish to represent themselves. Some people prefer to negotiate for themselves, and some people make a good job of negotiating for themselves.”

The Conservative opposition, in 1999, did not argue that workers should have other options for representation – they argued against enshrining in law the right to union representation in order to defend a status quo in which there was no (statutory) right to representation at all. This was – and is – consistent with the argument always advanced by employers who resist union involvement in the workplace – that they do not want an “external third party” involved in their relationship with their workforce.

The introduction of the statutory right to be accompanied, with its restriction to work colleagues or trade union representatives, created some additional work for the Certification Officer, the Government official who has the job of maintaining a register of trade unions. From time to time “trade unions” would arise which weren’t really collective bodies negotiating terms and conditions of employment but which had been set up to try to offer individual representation (presumably in order to make money). The Certification Officer refused to list these as trade unions.


Here is another.

Here is yet another.

In the third of those links you can read the Certification Officer’s comments to one of the would-be founders of a “trade union” which wasn’t. “Section 10 (of the Employment Relations Act 1999) was not enacted so as to allow workers to be represented at internal disciplinary or grievance hearings by solicitors or consultants; such outside representation being opposed by most employers and employers’ associations.”

This, therefore, is the point at which the history lesson comes up to date – and the Government’s ignorance of workplace reality is made very clear. Sensible employers would prefer that worker representation was provided by organisations with which the employer has some ongoing relationship, rather than by “no win no fee” solicitors or any other organisation which is focused only on the individual. Anti-union employers might prefer a tame staff association. No employer wants a free-for-all for workplace representation.

Of course, a Government which is looking to crash out of the European Union without regulatory alignment is obviously not simply reflecting the views (or interests) of large employers (it’s called “relative autonomy” for any students of political economy). The opening up of individual workplace representation to new organisations is clearly being driven ideologically. It’s probably the sort of thing we can expect from “assorted weirdos”.

The plan to let private consultants try to make money from individual representation in the workplace may be intended as an attack upon trade unions, but it is really an attack upon good employee relations and a "spiv's charter."

It is fairly obvious that the option of “alternative representation” won’t pose much of a direct threat to trade union membership in the long run. If there was a lot of money to be made out non-trade union individual representation of working-class people it would have happened by now. At most there could be a marginal impact on union membership among higher-paid professional workers who could afford to pay the sort of subscriptions to a “non-union” from which a profit might be made.

This particular cunning plan is no more than a straw in the wind, but it is a chill wind which threatens ever further restrictions on the right to strike. We need to defend the principles of collectivism from every attack, even the daft ones.

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